AVD

Amy VanDonsel
Posts Tagged ‘art’

“The Shape of a Man”

Art exhibit and chapbook release

Mad Art Gallery
2727 So. 12th St., St. Louis
7-11 p.m. January 6, 2012
New work by Amy VanDonsel
Poetry chapbook by Chris King
Poetry performance with musical guests

Additional art by:
Oscar Alvarez, Kevin Belford,
the late Hunter Brumfield, Ron Buechele,
Jon Cournoyer, Dr. Andrew Dykeman,
Fred Friction, Matt Fuller,
Robert Goetz, Chris King,
Noah Kirby, B.J. Vogt.
Potluck provided by men who cook.
Also, one exemplary man – Hap Phillips – will be exhibited.

Amy VanDonsel and Chris King collaborate on and co-curate a small group show, the first in a projected annual exhibit series exploring the shapes that men and women are in.

“The Shape of a Man” opens Friday, January 6, 2012, at Mad Art Gallery, 2727 So. 12th Street, with a reception from 7-11 p.m. “The Shape of a Man,” explores the shapes men are in through a creative conversation between a woman and a man working in a variety of media (with help from their man friends, living and dead).

Amy VanDonsel will show new mixed media, paintings and installation, and Chris King will release a chapbook, The Shape of a Man, and perform poems from it with Fred Friction, Roy Gokenbach and Josh Weinstein.

The exhibit also will feature visual art by Oscar Alvarez, Kevin Belford, the late Hunter Brumfield, Ron Buechele, Jon Cournoyer, Dr. Andrew Dykeman, Fred Friction, Matt Fuller, Robert Goetz, Chris King, Noah Kirby and B.J. Vogt. A potluck will be provided by the men artists and other men who cook. Also, one exemplary man – one Hap Phillips – will be exhibited in his natural, fabricated habitat.

Amy VanDonsel creates mixed media paintings on canvas or panels and installations with paper, tape, string and found items. Her work examines textual communication and the processing of information through abstracted and figurative imagery, and combines research interests in literature and technology with handmade visual representations. She is the Director of Marketing and Development for Saint Louis City Open Studio and Gallery; plans arts and charitable events; and serves on the board of directors for non-profit Poetry Scores.

Chris King has been recasting his old, bad poems into the 7/11 form innovated by Quincy Troupe, alternating lines with 7 and 11 syllables and alternating stanzas with 7 and 11 lines, with results he likes enough to publish. The Shape of a Man (Intagliata Imprints) compiles his more manly 7/11s. As an “artist,” he sketches people and then has the subject sign the sketch, or makes paintings on vinyl records based on his sketchbook. He will perform his poetry with musical guests through Noah Kirby’s sculpture With Solid Stance and Stable Sound.

VanDonsel and King have previously collaborated on projects for the non-profits Poetry Scores and Saint Louis City Open Studio and Gallery. They also happen to share a birthday. VanDonsel/King plan to continue the “Shape of a Wo/Man” project with a follow-up exhibit, “The Shape of a Woman,” in January 2013 at Mad Art Gallery, then continue the themed project with future group collaborations.

What: Visual Art Exhibit Opening and Chapbook Release, with accompanying performances

When: Friday, January 6, 2012, 7-11 p.m.

Where: Mad Art Gallery, 2727 S. 12th Street, St. Louis, MO 63118

Who: Presented by Amy VanDonsel and Chris King, also featuring Oscar Alvarez, Kevin Belford, the late Hunter Brumfield III, Ron Buechele, Jon Cournoyer, Dr. Andrew Dykeman, Fred Friction, Matt Fuller, Robert Goetz, Roy Gokenbach, Chris King, Noah Kirby, Hap Phillips, B.J. Vogt and Josh Weinstein.

Cost: Free and open to the public with cash bar

CONTACT:

Amy VanDonsel
avd@amyvandonsel.com
(314) 265-7836
www.amyvandonsel.com
Chris King
brodog@hotmail.com
314-265-1435
www.confluencecity.blogspot.com
Mad Art Gallery
2727 S. 12th Street
St. Louis, MO 63118
Phone 314.771.8230
info@madart.com
www.madart.com

Benefit Concert & Art Auction

SCOSAG Collaborative Painting at the St. Louis Vincentennial Screening of The Fly

I Don’t Know What This Is Yet

Photos from the Opening on April 23

These are some photos from the opening of This Page Intentionally Left Blank. The artwork is by Bryan Walsh, Jeremy Rabus, and Amy VanDonsel, and the photography is by Drew Jones.

This Page Intentionally Left Blank

All new work by Jeremy Rabus, Amy VanDonsel, and Brian Walsh
Opening reception: April 23, 2010 6 – 10 PM
2646 Cherokee Street, St. Louis, Missouri 63118

Exhibition on view:
Saturday, April 24 & Saturday, May 1, Noon – 4 PM

Seen more frequently in the past, the phrase “This page intentionally left blank” sometimes still appears on official or
published documents. Consequently, one is usually struck with a natural curiosity about this phrase and it’s purpose.

In the exhibition, This Page Intentionally Left Blank, the new work of Jeremy Rabus, Amy VanDonsel and Bryan Walsh will
address and investigate the visual and psychological effects of the appearance of this phrase on some printed materials.

Amy VanDonsel combines mediums – including acrylic, pastel, and found paper – to explore the perception of figure versus ground. Her work for “This Page Intentionally Left Blank” examines spacial boundaries by playing hide and seek with layers of objects and mediums. By exposing the supports of stained wood panels, the negative space is highlighted, and what is missing is revealed. “This page intentionally left blank” is an everyday kōan – a statement which is not understood by rational thinking, but rather by intuition. Curiosity about this familiar phrase, and its effects on discursive thought, leads to an exploration of pictorial counterparts to language phenomenon, such as “visual palindromes.” Further imagery is inspired by hazy memories of number two pencils and ditto sheets, the smell of chalk dust, or pink-beige paint peeling from a row of lockers. Subverted maps, graphs and grids, blurring text, and forgotten love notes ask: “What really happened in your third grade mind when page six referred to itself?”

(Also check out the fantastic work of Rabus and Walsh: jeremyrabuspaintings.blogspot.com / iambwalsh.com)

Wall Ball 2010

I’m so excited to be doing Wall Ball again in 2010. Coming up this Saturday, it’s one of my favorite things to do in St. Louis. For information, check the events page, or see photos from last year here.

Julie Mehretu: Workday

Yeah. It’s like this.

[via Art 21]

Exploding Cell

A Web project by Peter Halley called Exploding Cell, hosted by MoMA New York in conjunction with the exhibition New Concepts in Printmaking 1: Peter Halley.